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Leslie Clement

 (413) 567-7887

Email:  lesliec@rcn.com

 

Caring for clients along

their real estate journey

 in Western Massachusetts

 

Flying Forms a Challenge

Sites and Specs—DOC newsletter June 1983

1978 - 1982

Daredevil Days:  Union Carpenter Apprenticeship

 

After graduating from college in 1978, Leslie at twenty-one years old discovered that her liberal arts degree had in no way prepared her to make a living.  Seeking the highest paying job available and enamored with the danger and glamour of construction, Leslie applied to work as a union carpenter apprentice with the Springfield Carpenter Union Local 108. 

The apprenticeship required four years of working construction, as well as evening classes which taught specialty skills such as draftsmanship, finish carpentry, surveying and estimating before journeyman status was awarded.  

Leslie's first job was working on a series of bridges being built for the 391 highway.  She learned to walk on steel beams, climb into concrete forms between the steel rods and scale scaffolding.  

 

The next job Leslie was sent on was the Bank of Boston building in downtown Springfield where she worked for Daniel O'Connell and Sons.  With a tower crane which rose out of the center of the building and a crew of 300 men (and 6 women!), the eighteen story high rise went up swiftly.  During this time, Leslie purchased an enormous Queen Anne Victorian home in the Maple Hill Historic District;  during the winters when she was laid off, she restored the home. 

 

In 1982, Leslie went to work on the renovation of a Mason Square apartment building.  One memorable day while working on a fifth floor scaffolding, she developed a sudden (and continued) fear of heights. 

Leslie completed her apprenticeship by entering a statewide carpentry contest for apprentices being awarded journeyman status, placing fourth place. hen, unable to climb now, it was obviously time to do something else. 

 

Lessons Learned: 

 

On the lighter side, I am so glad I survived those dangerous and crazy years!  But as my father says, at that point in my life, if I wasn’t working as a union carpenter, I probably would have been doing "some other damn fool thing!”

 

Working on construction crews taught me a lot about team work and the importance of being cheerfully committed ---- freezing on bitterly cold winter mornings and suffering through hot, hot summer afternoons.  I also learned the importance of a sense of humor when the day involved doing dull repetitive work like taking out hundreds of identical bolts for an entire week!  For obvious reasons, I also learned  the need to assess risk before beginning a task.  

 

And naturally, being a carpenter has proven to be invaluable as a real estate broker since I have a clear understanding of how buildings are put together!

 

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